I think banning some rifles because of plastic parts and folding stocks is dumb, but we do need to have better gun control in general and we do need to look at why we have so much violent crime (gun and no gun)
1/5/2013 10:45:36 PM
^ what kind of "better gun control" do you support? Personally, I'm a ccw permit holder and have no problem with that level of "control" for purchases. Yes, it does put some restraints on the 2nd but I don't see them as prohibitive other than perhaps cost for lower income owners. Beyond that, there are several things that I wouldn't mind seeing added (qualification for renewal for one, new background /mental health checks are already run at renewal). I'd also like to see a LOT more in the way of firearm education. There are a surprising number if "accidental" deaths each year that all boil down to negligence and ignorance. I'd really love to see more public schools with shooting teams as they provide a wealth of knowledge to a group that needs it badly in a controlled setting with proper supervision as well as maybe something in health class that demonstrates what to do when they find a firearm and take some of the wonder out of them. What I am not in favor of (and vehemently oppose) is any kind of ban on "assault weapons" or restrictions on capacity or purchasing. There is no weapon, accessory, or magazine for sale today that is really any more dangerous than others. If someone is murdered today, the chances of more than 5-6 shots being fired is low. If someone is hell bent on mass murder, a restriction on mag capacity isn't going to make a difference (wasn't the VT shooter using 10-round mags?). PEOPLE and our society are the problem. That's where we need to focus efforts.
1/5/2013 11:09:46 PM
1/5/2013 11:15:04 PM
maybe not you specifically; you're right, I don't know your stance on that. Now I'm curious, though....but I think you'd be awfully hard pressed to argue that my comment addressed to "you guys" in the obviously collective sense isn't accurate.
1/5/2013 11:31:59 PM
1/5/2013 11:40:34 PM
^WRAL did it first back this summer with ccw permit holders. Even with a huge amount of backlash nationwide they never took it down (though they did edit some of the info).
1/5/2013 11:48:12 PM
http://1389blog.com/2012/12/23/larry-correia-refutes-the-gun-controllers-once-and-for-all/
1/6/2013 7:54:57 AM
^Good post
1/6/2013 8:29:35 AM
^^^^ there has never been any common ground with registration. That's a supreme taboo. In fact, that's the only reason most people support the "gun show loophole" (actually has nothing to do with gun shows--it's just allowing private party sales without going through an FFL). The purpose of the gun show loophole is to prevent a de facto registry.Now, closing the gun show loophole in the sense of requiring all sales to have a background check is probably common ground, if done in such a way as to alleviate privacy concerns.Licensing might even be OK.A registry, or even anything that smells like or could lead to a registry, will never fly. The backlash would be massive, and I think that many people would just refuse to register stuff that they already own.[Edited on January 6, 2013 at 10:35 AM. Reason : ^^ I posted that and another couple of links a fee pages ago. Good article.]
1/6/2013 10:32:20 AM
We need registration, its the only way to track circulation
1/6/2013 12:37:00 PM
it's also the first step to confiscation
1/6/2013 12:38:42 PM
Yeah, registration is not gonna happen. I'm fairly confident that it won't pass, and almost 100% confident that it won't happen. People aren't going to submit to it, and how are you going to force them to?
1/6/2013 1:07:20 PM
over time the number of unregistered guns would fall, no one is saying it would be perfectly accurate from the startright now we don't even have a good guess how many guns are out there, not even a reasonable +/- ballpark guess, we need to start tracking guns and you can only do that through registration
1/6/2013 1:44:42 PM
^ And so we come back to the same question that need to be asked of any gun control measure. What good will registration / tracking do? What problem does it solve?
1/6/2013 2:27:27 PM
lets have like apartheid. guns outside city limits like wild west and no guns inside new york style
1/6/2013 2:35:49 PM
the point of registering existing guns is more retarded then everything else.Its just going to make a lot of people with guns criminals without doing anything wrong... it's not going to give the govt a registry of people who shoot people like morons seem to think it will.
1/6/2013 3:19:45 PM
No it won'tRegister gun = not a criminal Durr
1/6/2013 7:22:10 PM
1/6/2013 7:59:36 PM
hey guys have you seen this awesome blog post, i'm surprised it hasn't been posted yethttp://1389blog.com/2012/12/23/larry-correia-refutes-the-gun-controllers-once-and-for-all/
1/6/2013 8:30:44 PM
Maybe you could start at the beginning and try to refute some of his points? It's always easier to focus on a singular target (the blogger) and maybe it can take this dull thread in a new direction.You know, since every 5 pages we end up exactly where we were initially-
1/6/2013 8:41:35 PM
We've talked about all of those things, which point do you think we still need to cover?
1/6/2013 8:48:22 PM
Half gun owners won't register for the reason that it does violate the 2nd amendment and I don't know if you know this but gun owners have more in common with the patriots that founded this country then the pansies that run it now. And it will make sure all unregistered guns are in the hands of criminals congrats you've not stopped any crime, you've just tracked and invaded the privacy of honest people.[Edited on January 6, 2013 at 8:56 PM. Reason : Stupid law.]
1/6/2013 8:55:47 PM
We've covered armed teachers in Utah?We've covered the fantasy world these lunatics live in that other shooters do not?We've covered teachers being speedbumps instead of special forces?We've covered existing firearms regulations that the general public have no idea about?We've covered the fact that most people don't know the difference between automatic and semi-automatic? And the fact the former is still used in crimes and the latter is the single most common type of gun in the world?Okay. Now I'm 1/4 of the way down the page. You can occupy yourself with these or you can continue scanning (or you can stick to your cop-out that says there's nothing new here).Or far more likely...You don't agree with it so you aren't going to read it in its entirety. Too lazy to scan, too lazy to refute. Back to armchair politicking and Comedy Central!
1/6/2013 8:59:25 PM
Gun registration does not violate the 2nd amendment, what case law are you basing that on?[Edited on January 6, 2013 at 9:02 PM. Reason : ^yep, literally all of those things]
1/6/2013 9:01:38 PM
^What current problem does registering solve though?
1/6/2013 9:16:18 PM
not having a list of doors to knock on[Edited on January 6, 2013 at 9:18 PM. Reason : ]
1/6/2013 9:18:15 PM
Provides a life history for a weapon, ensures that stolen guns are reported and no stolen guns are sold as legal guns. Adds personal responsibility, have to store securely and can't just loan or give away without a record. Helps minimize people being able to buy guns who aren't allowed.Only way to know that people who shouldn't have guns aren't buying them since its now tracked on both sidesOnly way to get data to track weapons, analyze patterns. Only way to get data to track effectiveness.
1/6/2013 9:30:06 PM
1/6/2013 10:00:01 PM
Liberal power grab and political brownie points of course.Wouldn't miss an opportunity to gloat on MSNBC or NPR!We gotta stick it to dem dumb rednecks fran, etc.
1/6/2013 10:28:35 PM
As time goes on, the number of unregistered guns will fall. It will be mor difficult to get an unregistered gun. Under this its harder for the criminal to get a gun because now both parties are accountable. It's not as much that stolen guns are unreported, although it still happens, it's when guns are "stolen". People who aren't allowed to have guns can still get them through private sales, but by having them all registered now there is a record of who bought the gun. When this is updated in the database it is double checked. There will always be illegal guns, this just reduces them and makes it harder for criminals. The owners are not the people who need to be tracked, the guns are.[Edited on January 6, 2013 at 10:30 PM. Reason : It's not my fault if you are dumb, yowillyyo]
1/6/2013 10:30:06 PM
yor mor dum
1/6/2013 10:35:32 PM
1/6/2013 11:29:40 PM
Please respond in paragraph form, don't aaronburro this thread full of quote bombing. It gets annoying.
1/6/2013 11:33:00 PM
1/7/2013 12:21:14 AM
1/7/2013 12:24:35 AM
yeah, of course, just go/no-go. maybe also require something like last 4 input from the buyer, and have the website use a virtual keyboard to prevent keylogging my unscrupulous sellers.[Edited on January 7, 2013 at 12:39 AM. Reason : not sure what federal law is on SSN usage, even if it's just last 4. DoD has gone away from it.]
1/7/2013 12:38:23 AM
Just wondering, why would anyone register a gun they planned to illegally sell? Even if you were approached by someone who couldn't legally buy a gun, why sell them one you had already registered? Doesn't make sense. So how would registration help stop illegal sales? Also, guns have serial numbers. Couldn't this be considered a form of registration? You should be able to trace at least the original sale in most cases I would think? I buy all my guns at gun shows, cash and carry, so I'm not familiar with buying from a licensed dealer, but they almost all had to go through one at some point. I'm no cop but if I were investigating a crime I'd be more concerned with who the shooter was than the owner.Aside from that, I don't see how registration would prevent any crimes. I could see it possibly being useful in an investigation but that's after the fact. By then it's too late. And preventing crime is the only credible justification for registering guns...in my humble opinion that is.
1/7/2013 3:03:26 AM
The serial number would be used for registration, but no, it is not a form of registration at all. The reason it makes it harder is because over time the number of unregistered guns will drop. Instead of being able to buy any legal weapon like now, they would only be able to buy an illegal unregistered weapon. Over time this would become more and more difficult. Also, most guns are legal until the moment they are used in a crime. By having data from registration, the information and trends can be analyzed to find predictive trends. This will allow the problem to be treated proactively as a social health issue, and not only retroactively.
1/7/2013 6:39:12 AM
1/7/2013 7:52:19 AM
the problem is:I already own this gun... i purchased it based off the laws at the time, had i have known i was going to be forced to register it, i may not have purchased it."grandfathering" stuff in is a bull shit term for "we're not going to change the terms of your original sale" I'm sorry but I own X Y AND Z @ these terms... you shouldn't be able to go back and fuck that up.
1/7/2013 8:18:24 AM
You guys still taking about guns?
1/7/2013 8:30:18 AM
Let's all be very clear about a point:If you don't like registration because you think it is a list for what doors to knock down to confiscate your guns, what you are saying is that without registration, should your gun become illegal, you would keep it illegally. That is what you are saying, that this would make it harder for you to be a criminal. If we are in a situation where guns are made illegal, law abiding citizens should want it to be as effective as possible. It also doesn't follow that you criticize registration for being ineffective, then criticize it for being so effective they are going to knock down doors and take all of your guns.Criticism also ignores that District of Columbia v. Heller upheld that the 2nd amendment is an individual right and found against blanket gun bans
1/7/2013 9:09:17 AM
1/7/2013 9:15:49 AM
1/7/2013 9:20:24 AM
^ No, it's true every single time. It is illegal under federal law to transfer or sell any gun, whether privately or otherwise to a person prohibited from owning a gun. By definition, if you are prohibited from owning a gun and you buy a gun from somewhere, you have engaged in an illegal transaction. And if the seller is going to sell the gun illegally, then they're not likely to be stopped by registration either. They'll just say the gun was "stolen" just like they do now.[Edited on January 7, 2013 at 9:26 AM. Reason : asdf]
1/7/2013 9:24:01 AM
So you are against gun control because its ineffective, and your defense against control to add accountability and make it effective is the very same ineffective gun control? Doesn't make sense.There is nothing to stop someone from illegally selling a legally purchased hand gun. There is also no way to stop someone from selling a long gun to someone who is not allowed to buy it, because as there isn't even a purchase permit requirement the seller has no way of even knowing if its a legal transaction. Registration helps you track this more effectively and adds accountability to the seller.
1/7/2013 9:39:23 AM
Yes, vastly incomplete data will give you terrific trends to analyze.It seems you understand current laws, they appear to be enough, however they aren't enforced and that makes you angry.Therefore your solution is far more stringent laws. What are you going to do when they aren't enforced either?You should start stealing peoples' guns and destroying them yourself, or elect your own Hitler.
1/7/2013 10:33:01 AM
nope, you have not understood my point[Edited on January 7, 2013 at 11:54 AM. Reason : let's see if you can figure out which part of your characterization is wrong]
1/7/2013 11:53:26 AM
While you're busy being obtuse I want to know if anyone has read what medications Adam Lanza was on?So far I've only seen speculation, but I want to know specifically what drugs were in his system.Seems this particular point is being a bit under-reported...http://www.wnd.com/2013/01/the-giant-gaping-hole-in-sandy-hook-reporting/Looks to me like pills show up at mass-shootings just as often as guns do.
1/7/2013 12:27:01 PM
So we need to include family members and household members in pre-purchase psychological screenings[Edited on January 7, 2013 at 12:30 PM. Reason : nope, guess you can't figure it out]
1/7/2013 12:29:23 PM